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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1915-07-22, Page 6Nt9111M11111.1.1111.111111,161.12W1/1016.111111..1.11111r14.111111,M."1111' an Against Woman et A Terrible Accusation. •$114.10211X TITIA-(Celled.) eltat timentiut altrrea through kritiesdi=edesmef* She wilts -only a little nirl se the time, but she recalled it with etarelter clistieetivenisa. She hood the feeble vele* *win: °I sit leaving Xoty burden to you, my derlime, , Behar with it am patient' all plates, yoe win eat he allowed to re- main Um. You will I* taken away Vir a place of absolute safety, where neither they no the minion* of the law can find you. But should that fall, altould they seek you out, I will elmeand of the law that it give * Nth - sr his rights agsinst the married man who hu stolen tbe honor of Ins daughter!" • For s, moment the eaurreltY of the charge did not roach Ails*, then all the ewful horror of it forced itself upon her. She steggered terekward, and would have fallen but for Dowd eons* from hoeutiful lips," Ise Valworth's fierce grasp upon her quietly. u4Persuatif0 Is so lunch • wrist. Be saw that the eruel shot haat prettier. He hope* that be es* Per-. told, and once more drawing her tri. suede you to consent" tunpitently towed him, he exclaimed 'Be never can!" returned Allsii,rin her ear: .tililooking into hie *roe, her. tall "Now are you ready to torment?" youlifc form drawn to` its full -height,' But Already she was ,herselt again her firm and set. "You bevel and had flashed upon hiro expree- trahned Ine intg eating here. I con- Won of withering Imithing., foie that I was fool to allow ite.but I "No:" she. answered, scornfully, having. fallen into the power of "The father, capable of a taunt like acoundrele, you will'discover that I,' that, is not worthy either of obedienee or of saving. I forgive youkonly be- cause you are not yourself, but again I defy you to 40 your worst. Again I tell you that I do not fear youl lYo you think 5tour fool charge would be believed When I am the promised wife of Leslie Dunraven's wife's brother?" .,"A mere blind -a tiretence! We urideratand the situation and we will haL nat , know bow to protect myiseIft had alt. bone 14'41,41.1. °Ur.' "You forget the power of *father." deaw-that legaeY * u.P.a* 1"3"-"er "I do not forget where it Midst" she tbad l'ult swaY uks a "ward, I"- cried, dramatictlly. "You, ean not herself Irma And aw °he force me into* marriage! You may W$5 elyingt . kill me, if you like, but that it, the Row she vrishod 'Um= 4004 4"111` worst that you an dor -• borne bravely! '144 lc Still looking steadily into her eyes, How she cursed herseX ter et e• t II intoxison went to etep °war er. e fortittule! "God has sent thii other curse into am ignoran of where t the my life bemuse I refused the reverie her with comr forge. Btealthl ci ttpent Seasonable , abilities He placed Irvin me" she "Itert step e'was APPreaebil/Ar her few athifter leaving house? DQ . Codflsir Cutlets -Prepare ,shredcled He woulfl not &law His will to he dise :44101011 Ars ..Mte ulle,nnY beilorea could ieriviiiee the fiat. entlets, dip in egg and crembe, you: 11-11°11te illeTairthqrit WV: iodfish au for codfish balls,_ shape in r uff It and fry in deep fat. riloomed. "It wen fi,o tench me Iluit A sktre Oliver was ereeping over her. irif:aut o - God! ••.',1 Accent the "4"r9" ' that' yeu wer "ountec nt? da. not epeale - but :•set his eyes upon !rove it.to the 'Dorm think:: =1.1M 111111,11k r ' 111"1", • , .11 The Charm of Eastern Fragrance. to typified ht every sealed packet of 11 Selected leaves front the finest plan.tations, %mous for teas of subtle deliciousness. SALADA is ,fresh and free from Oust, 130.14ACII, MIXED OR Gaaat 77 int, only pleading for mercy!" Joe head the groan, and leaked up for tocryin " lase .71.0 stretched outa longi bony Arm *rid :Via01..abbutItk touch ,her on the face, when 'she :she* off' theinfluence that WO, stawirmastering her,. and- stetped back, rittering."*. lbw, making tau h • - • . Ailsa," be said, gently. doctor 2 said as you'd needall your curage. "I understatil your infernal design Will you come nowt" but too welt," she cried out, tragical - "Yee, in one moment." ly; "hut it, too, shall fail. You can She went to a writing -table, and not make me obey your infamous will seating herself there wrote hastily: es you have made my , father. Do "My father is I have been' You think I blame him now for the summonee.ehere, They ten me there ruin that has been workedin his life? Is no time to almrffie and therefore All these years yours has been the de - do not wait tO arouse ou. Will re- vire power that has loci him to turn as soon as possib AILSA. When she had loomed the NistY lines, align then in an envelope and addrus it to Dunraven, then *rose. • . "I havn% even hat er wrap!" she Youre is the soul upon which the re- sponsibilitY =lot Ire. You are *5 much to blame, for the death of my mother as if your hand had struck the blow that robbed her of life. The bedsit, desire that bile led• your sin - exclaimed. glancing About her, flue/ ful infatuation to me existed first for were all burned last night. But, her. see it all as clearly es, Ieould • can call carriage from the office." read a printed page. • You gained the • Together with Jae, dm went doviii- control over my father because the stairs and ordered the carriage, then love of ,God was so strong in her life " placed the note In the hands of the 14 -boy. that to Mr. D'unra.v‘en when • he is she ,explained;. "but don't arouse him to give it to lum." " Then, veal), 'Joe stilt beside her, she •`• went out and got into the carriage. The air was bitterly ,cold, but it • 'seemed to comfort_ was the cut of a lash upon her face; yet- she turzied. toward it, and looked steadily out the window, forgetting the boy's Presence. She was going over the old days again -all of theme -Wing, with that peculiar charity we hold to- - ward, the dying, to remember some net of kindness ;toward her upon her father's pert; but there was not one 'that she ,could , that you could not secure it over her, and you ruined her, body and 'soul through him. You broke her heart, where you, simply intended. to &Tie her from him., :She died, then yell turned to me; but God has sent roe intelligence sufficient to defy you. Now, then," -folding her arms across her heaving breast --"I am ready to die, if death it is to be, lint never to obey your will; never to become the thing that you would Make of me; never to be your wife! I despise, loathe you! "Let him 'come 'when he Is ready, with all the clergymen in the .world, but he can not compel inc against my will!" • „ Simonson's face was working with rage.• There *as a whitish foam It was singtilarly pitiful. There about his lips, his eyes were glaring, his firtg s opening' and abutting with a pecur clutching movement. Once or twice he put them up to his throat and tore' at his collar,' but, he did not interrupt her, did not speak until she had concluded. • • had not 'been one little tenderness in her childhood, not one little ymprithe- • tic word, not It soothing kiss for 'a childish 'hurt, not a Murmur of re- gret at the sorro* lie had brought upon her -nothing. Only drunken- ness and blows and cursing., Yet slie was ready to forgive him. With her whole heart she was ready to forgive. ,Was there not somethirig‘ like unto Divinity in such clunitY as that ? The carriage stopped After a time. How well she remembered the door of that tenement! And how she, had hated it! Yet she had not thought,' • when, slie Under what eitcum- 'atm:ices She Should 'return there. Her hands were like ice as she open- ' ed. the,carriage door and stepped into the street. Joe followed her. . •„ "Collect at the ” hotel'," she said quietly to the driver, then turned into the tenement. The day had already begun there. Dirty children vere standing about in the hall. Oncg she had been familiar by narae to all of them, yet now they seemed not to recognize her as she passed through them. They stood back, with • dirty fingers in their inouths, and eyed her silently as, vvith bowed head, she passed swiftly up the dingy, rickety stairs. Top floor, turn to the left., She had not forgotten, indeed. •• 'The place looked fouler and dirtier ---than- when she had -left- it, --As -she reached•the door, she turned and sniff-, ed,sadIyAnto the face of the boy, who was still at her heels. - "Thank you, Joe.. I may need you • later. Will you remain around -if you can'?" ' , - Then she turned the knob and went There was • no one in the front " room, end with a little gesture of dis- gnat ,at the Mil that surrounded her, she ' went swiftlyy toward ° the inner reem.r4t.id once more opened a doer. wAs_ciaseit behind ber almost be__ Oh, my darling, think!. • It is your face leuked -snailingly act, , int& her ' : _•, He has been silent'becauSe of "Your dear father did not believe Tfir promise .311.6u1(1 b'ecidne. that you would come; but r 'knew :,ymstirj his :*ife* ;•NoWt .Your • • dab:tied the, 'Pored •of the man she h led arid feared:- most upon earth-. Simonson,the Jew! • • ' ' -"Where father?" ..demanded- "But there is a way of forcing the will," he, exclaimed, his voice heavy and hoarse and gutteral. "There is a way of fin -clog the will, and you -will find out that we know how to do it. I would have given you. the best of my life that ;there was to give if you let me; but Since you will not have it so, since you force it from me, you shall accept' it . whether you will or not -anything I choose to give. Very well. I agree that your father is under my. Mated, if you will. But, he has com- mitted a crime -the crime of murder! I was the witness! I can send him to the gallows if so desire. His life and his honor are rnY haw* They are yours to do with as you desire. Consent to the position I of- fer you, and My secret and his he - long to you alone. Refuse, and it shall be given to the world. That is inY ultimatum!" Again Ailsa laughed moCkingly but shortly. "You think I believe you?" she de- rhanded, "You think I can be fooled by the mere word of a man who would hesitate at no 'crime to carry an in - Give your secret to the world. Condemn him to death. if you will, still I should refuse rathye saolteitin”ative• Better his life than She had not heard :the opening of the door, had not seen her father ert-, ter;'Und did not know of his presence until he became 'aware that , was kneeling by, her side, that his hands were lifted in supplication. "Ailsa," he whispered, his voice tranblink as if the tears were 'Very near to felling, "don't say that; dear!It , fore she had stepped inside'theroom, ifa_ltuatler:14!.1,i-riativdvkhiclicttitanirnhamv...1r-stheaid and a hateful g_ father will be handed' over to the !ay., • and-fh-e 'law knows no. pity. Think, Ansa! Your father -your dead moth- er's husband!". "Seen if I would yield," she eusw- ered, drawirig' her'. skirts frointhis PHe iri' one minute.. I hands as if his very touch were pain- . ma,ede4 besoxe,o , , tion. „ have no proof that your ' "Be ha :Is he not dm"' is :trice link more than You , -"Oh, no, my dear! , That was only: s.., little irise We Used to get you here. He insieted 'that YOU, would.pay. no at- . . tentioni. but .1.-. 'knew!. you Irettenthan; -. t,h4a,tvolt;iev,i,... .has he ',.o'n(i.,, " again d,,',x0fotithirttyyrnor h,„.tioilvte,,b4.heotOtiipyeousrb yoreilelth 'at,: ‘' •malleirelat(hletAlhls'le h'' 4c:4, hrren17'neb'14.1,net414 .d/irlpert of him, so mach a creatiire of hiS bruin , that you are rie Ringer- MY eived-' . ' • ' ' , father! That man is dead./ buried "To obtain the services a clergy -I in the, grave of my Maher, and you 611414 clitiv11164.'"4"1 1;111°Sat of -Nathan SlitiOnseltV .. -.. ,pereuedo you to .become • my wife at , once, and,wo iteahtd tie mere fltde,,,,n04,1ben you Unlit save al, el You Must delays that might on anothgr occasionl. not, shall not refuse!. ' Tee elergkruau eve fatar,to My hopes!, . , , , is outside Waiting; Thereorneet you become. his Vvife„ his lesiva toter Me is - -- ' , ' done.' MY word. hi kept, std,--,, •, •.• CriaIsn Itx.v.. . ' wrOur word to him --but . what *of : 0%14,4 able .te. realise tire taint . indzeitY' of tlid scoundrel that ten- YALI•li.-13(ltutia.v.riginlyY? ' extr'" 811)71, 1,6011 -fronted her, Ailea lifted her head and "witi looted strhigh4..and -Unflinchingly into hear? 140a41°-*Iii31 ' Wel/kg There' is ItO ergumerit that you can' use,. no ' Me. hateful eyeg. ' - ' Ides. that you 'tan Malt% no threat 1.1eurilly *lien fAie was attemete410 ., dint ,ynn can invent!, , de that, her own loathing had d.ver-. . 'ebine !lel and she shrank •avaiy,, b t Even before ;he had finished 117%ra; h dismaydepoft hie feet, hie haggard Von tinze rtaril tilrlif;iajtti()otri.al. l•••1.114411.. °r • -. to tiers', Ilia breath bearinC disgust to ' "Do &nit really Mean," 5$ihe said,. het',0 nriostrials.0 p }lee' had • ; 4A•eic.dc.,10 . her, eloWly, "that my father Wonld pre? rri, ,t,j,,_,..u,. grasp .1.11g iron, ti.d,f r ed. 1 Ina into marzqe with you?" •ill ner,r)11',Z6,..iyieto It‘ cried, lionrs'00 '• • .Therawng in egdribahle deOrti in ., 6 • • wri•thfut •determinationr. etlern„0, eda,flidr'onz" Sal mmoniti ;Ott% 0 euxop, arneesdnit; 1111101 or otlottookt . fitiofccfroi cut° Very'61et41 ee tl et' tiit‘litYet4404; tadvarltro! Were dying, as . report came •to me. You have- lied; tricked 'Mei, and 1 will helieyc nothing!'• you 'think -X would ; accept: your. word- °Ma is ::-Ivferay,,,-thclhoughte • man " ratorne'd• Simonson, serenely., aret_tiothints„,„nothing,huti the. ,etiit.sr, expeas no Sac---------nt men or Date Jelly -7 -Stew dates until tender. WOrtlan. YOU have pretended to love remove the stones, nut 4111°1d. and lifre.,Dunraven.' Will you haste 'thee° pour over :them liquid. 'lemen Matters aired in .the courts'?" an serve with whipped -dent. ' She knew perfectly irn frona.whors. Ch, Halibut Rabbit -Sprinkle two slices he had obtained his information . , from or fresh halibut with milt and pepper Muriel Ogden-but she w" t" d melted butter,and broil until tiled with scorn and indignation to and p it ed her iir a, tender point -Ins threat hot •welsk rablnt. a Moment she stood silent, then epee slice% and lay In well salted Water for the Weight. of his clutching .Angers from her wrist, bowleg the wounded- meal .an'cl fry on. both side*s. ' Member with her other hand. - =Antes for cooking. Wile eneef• t$ tell bird 40, yet his last that touch- brown On?both...sidege our over to bring pain to Ethel Dunraven, For Egspient,peel eggplant., eut rn again.dreikt herself up, and shook off an henr wipe dry. Dip in -flour or "You are a coward and a ecound- reit", she cried, scornfully, , "You have destroyed.evee the. pity that WAS in my heart, and only contempt re- mains. Neither threats -of- public shame nor violence can move me. The censure of theworld is nothing to me. and Ethel Dunraven could never be, made to believe what she knows to be falee. xou are at liberty to do your can be egged and crumbed before frying and are nicer than when they are merelY floured. • Waffles -Put two euPfuls of flout, one teaspoonful. baking...powder . and halt teaspoonful salt into a mixing bowl. Add three eggs and butter the size of 041 egg. After Voltaire' sift - worst, and I am ready to accept the bake lowly en a griddle. Brown ed the flour make in email cakes and situation as God sees fit to allow it • • . to be sent. You have gained Beth,- well w ono Buie and then tn° ing.ve perhaps the murder of your own thild by the dastardly trick you have played .upon me, I am. ready for anything, save to be that man's wife, and that neither you nor he can compel!!! -- ' Iler arms were folded upon her breast, her flashing •oyes fixed mien Simonsonr-with incalculable contemPot and distain, , Por just a moment he seemed to shrink before • her, and then he straightened himself for a renewed at- tack, 'knowing that if he were to suc- ceed at all it must be done at once. • And the clergyman -an authentic man of God -stood outside waiting. (To be Continued.) • ' One Year Old ne Birth. , Chinese keep record of time )..)Y. means of cycles of 'twelve years each. Thc first year of n new cycle is the year. of the rat, the second, the year ,of the ex, the third" the year of the tiger, etc. A child born in the year of the tiger belongs to the Order of the Tiger., A' Chinese child is , also held to be a year old at *time -of birth. Seven days' later, .if asked the age of his • child, the ,lather will reply, "a year and seven days." ;--- ••• - - _His Choice.. , Whiskey, , my friend, has killed more men. than bullets." "That,. may be, sir but, bejabers, bullets." other. be fall, whiskey than ' other.' • Chicken, Southern Style -Clean a• nd eardc chicken in _cold water. ,Cut„ in Dredge in flour arid lay in pan greased -well with 'cooking butter. Whilee-the- chicken is cooking- -make some corn fritters, using canned corn. Season With Salt and - pepper and cover with flour, enough, to hold the cern together: -Try in the same pan with chicken. Put in thin strips of bacon; this will give a delicious flavor to the meat.„ Serve the chicken in- .:11'4(1nel meat plates; allowing half chicken to a pereen. Garnish the plate with a fritter and a slice - of bacon. • Spinach -Pick a peck ,of _spinach carefully and let; it stand in cold wa- ter for err hour or two. Put in 1i -oiling: salted Water and let boil'until tender. Take. un in- colander, that4t-zto4X- drain perfectly: Put in a hot dish With a ..piece egg. Add half teaspoonful salt and a little -vinegar.' Stir -w -ell. chop the spinach ifiiknee, and add the dressing. You can add a, °mall cupful Of cream- if you Cucumbers ia-• Brown GravY-Pre- pare half ta 51ezen medium, size cucuinbers. Cut, in thick slices and put in ice-waterr-Let-utand -half-hour, and drain.- Simmer in 'unseasoned beef stock until tender. Scoop Out the cu- cumbers and „lay in a vegetable dish. Cook one tablespoonful flow in a tableSpooriful butter. Add the Steck t added, *0 then with clear water. Finally,- pros the *pouted part.* be. fere they are quite dry. Ifythe opening on the porch where * drop screen is needed. la very wide it is often more practical to use two narrow seitens, rather than ono full .size -more practicel beCans0 they are not so heavy to drew up" and dewn. When the bottom. crust of loid so overbaked ea to be uneatable ro. move the hard part of it, cut into thin narrow strips, and„ these throw into SOUP moinent or so before serving. Ilowever brown they aro really a PelatAblo addition. BBTTLERS' §LASH, Printe, CROP for Thitu Year's Forest White ;forest fires alma the begin/ nhig" of May have been kept down by the fire ranging systems to a *action of last year's destruction, enough pub - and private -Owned timber. in this • pearuovoiensc: has been given to the Oaten te.compel'a close investigation of the • - . „ . and stir until thick and smooth. Sea- son zWith salt AO pour the tetuceover. the cucumbere • '• ' liseful Uinta. •- ; "A roast veal will he greatly 'Un- Orme& , la' larded; -this• preirmits it cll'Y and taste:Win wlien!ceok- The 'secret of making- popovers that really "pop" is to have the pans sizzling hot when the batter is Poured into thent. • • . One who has noted it carefully says that the meat from a seven -pound 'fowl will Make quart, mit IT, for gnlnrl To ' brighten brass curtain ,rings which- heve-become 4hem-ke paraffin oil for twenty-four houra. Then polish with chamois leather. In piece of a tape loop at the ,end of a kitchen towel ;work a large eye- let hole....This-will bo found strong- er and more lasting, as it cannot collie Off like the loop. • The .best lion stand'Is .a....hriek, It. is non-conductor of heat,. and far preferable on that account to the most elaborate open stand. Ink stains ; can-- be„ removed from oak furniture by • rubbing a littic splrits ofwine into -• alIONAng It to remain on Air a little time, and then-poliehieg, „ made -doubly .-- good, 'bY the addition. of a fel* spoonfuls of grated chocolate: before. baking. This makes .it 'richer and does.. net affect the flavor. • :' . Seep is Very. apt to turn ',White , paint yellow. Por Cleaning, use warm water • to which a little kerospee has .been added; ' this remove. most persistent Stains.. • ,' , , If, before putting the loaf cif gra- ham bread into the- oven, .you 'die' a spoon sin' water and pat the top of the bread With it, .the bread. will not have hard and ragged crust. •••Reduce labor by 'simpli,fyiiik duties, shirking. -.theM.:-•;„.Furnish 'houses with 'objects Of. beauty, but St teem be,,,few.in,number• Curtail the elaboration, Of meals without de- creasing either -Perfection of service or food value.' , It 'ought to be Mere generally known that wheat fleet is. probably the best' possible article to threw over a. fire caused by the spilling or igniting of kerosene oil. • 'Flour is nearly--rilways-within-!----convenien reach. , • ' Perspiration stains may be removed from the arms of white woolen Or Silk dresses by spongieg, with warm water; ,• to which ammonia' has been •.' , . . • • thougb .roiSes.. You think that and fine ' trievialeillgrotitvrioelacsa: (11 lev, 6.1 a friendo' will come bore an demand it 4Forger la•toleb an nelp word your reicaae. Tilden,. In° the first 40+1. It hi asserted. by expert forfeit engin- eers that while tallweY and lumber companies emegreatly•rediree the Atilt to the forests from locomotive. sparks and the debris, that ,follows cutting operations, immediate steps must be taken by the Provincial SevernMats. to curb the, evil of -settlers!.tires. • Every wooded proVince, ettrihttes much 'Us greet Annual WW1 to the. burning- of brush by farmers, farmers. 'It is absolutely, neeessat,y, Of OOtriao that farmers- should- dear uti and burning ,is usually the OAO Cheap method; . The only reetriction Salted by those concerned in forest protec- tion that permits shall be 'issued to those intending bete the brush on the edge otthe forests and. that in - specters shall establish the safest Method f doing it: 'Sabres of eases could be cited whore a settler, Often innocent Of any harrefel intention, stated o-fire-in-hiErprePertrto•pro vide for a hundred dollar crop k and ended up with destroying sores of thousands( and le one case three mil - ions) of „Allers worth of timber. * -In' the- area- - covered - :by -the-- St. Maurice Forest Protective Association in Quebec Province, 231 fires were en- countered -arid, fought lest 'sreer and of this number no less than 80 were due to careless and unthinkieg•settlers. In 1918, out of .306 &ea, 1)4 Were traced MAGIC 'BAKINGPOWDEW ri r -trill FM, 'LA 1 den' high .winds* lifted the burning' nuiterial into the forest and state& serioU* bine. “NOthing Is Morel curtain," remarked Chief Foreeter: MacMillan, "than that had there beerir, no permit regulation the results Would. have been disastrous in the extrema°. KAISER'S GIFT TO Loxporr. rmitmr1.1 1 Statile Near lIenelngton Pelage NINO ,. ,. , ., Sent From Germany- ' it is not generally kne*I1 that the/ ' statute of King William which stands!' outsi4e Kensington Pelee() Wile pre -1 seittea to England by the Xalser,' It bears ,. the following. inacriptlow- olviniam ul, of Grave, Xtug 0 Great Britain and.101410,113:8Q4792. rreeented, by -William IL, _GOMA Emperor and -..-King -..-of Praf$41,- t 1C41,1S PlWarct VII, for the British.na- tion, 1,907." • •, ' . - .. , ' A very Short tirne ago the Raise • • _ - . presented a . colossal statute to Nor ' :way. Ws tis :a' statute of Frithjof,7 the great IsTereO here, who is the MA Sect of an Icelandic saga '.assigned t the fourteenth ' century, ;• and relating his adventures. . It, ilf•designated commemorate 'the ' Kaiser's t'fitea4" fifth cruise to the Land of the •Mitle eight Sun. • The figure of the mythi- cal hero is forty feet.iiigliahout tim 1,. feet shorter than the, IC,aiser, *hike „ hinueee.-, and 'stands on a pedestal thirty feet high. A demi men lunch- ed in the chest cavity of this colossal ' 'Statute .Whilst .. -it was In course of, , erection. - ...;.---:.--•-•••tneee----" , . • ' The Greatest Cake Ever Built; Housewives, haw would yeti like to; beige: a cake of the following. dimen- sions and ingredients: Eighteen yards!, longi-eight-yardebtoticl:endmorethan...., one-half ,yard thick, containing thirty- six bushels 'Of flour, 200 gallons milk, one ten of better, huge quan- tity of yeast and 0;000f. eggs?' 'S'nelk, cake, probably the ..largeet evori. made; *me served in ,June, 1130$ byl: tethe some cause. Had- it not been for Prederi°1c. I.; King of Prus..1 the 11151&I L11 system of• fire- eta, to his areaY,following a huge rariging,--the -timber-burned-threugh pant. The %WOO soldiers,_ already a few agri. cultural acres 7; last year vgiuld have and -Omnante of it were distributed. the, attempt to 'clean, off not eat the entire cake ' morethanriqualled--the7Cest-of ',the ,tmiong- the iiihabitaltsof neighboring entire realf0,fieuritess.uBeelieryunreasonable province:otwe lit, towns and villages- acords'-of waste by Settlere, whotake. brush Wining intoown hands. The Cat -Beg Joke . , In Ontario thereis practically no ,Though matt POOPle frequently' use, .restriction .Upensettlers' brush- the expreSetion, ,","1.iet the cat out of ther', ; hourrinpisn got operations,woodia..nirdh•pth:ii.pebr:evinauce.,.. ohotga,:ortittes trerile:Inam'oiso•g• ..11090too•tryge,nr;:lityoli.;., known. It is .sald to have once thieril' end therities have" a Vied law and M.Face has Paid up in 'charred and useless :the young .pige when. the latter were' England to sabititute a cat for one of. 'Out of flrea establuilnng- a dosed as serious effort to regulate the Setting . taken' in bap!? to niarket These begs season during which no fire elishallJ3e, in old phraseology, were known.- pokes. ' If, any greenhornwas foolish ,set unless by perniltiaSue4 by a. fire enough to .buy. "a nig-lo.'0:nelee"-ethet wlthotit see- rhiliwngiesr.:obvTohnes4renfdoiffrzoint43entn•lifrostareht 1.61oitp,_,_4:4tirche_as,viecthite_waanalniasopl, stetv wi:.1ilibrcei,;. requiredthesiivatteiond9 give if he °Paned the Sank to satisfyhb*:, success .ixtBerietixashnapCieeluomfbaian sauer cloitraii4e,rtshte..: eseditneut4rileheearlenegnetheye Wyaii.14eled?lifeillesudreeWti.04 Jump out. Tho !'cat was. let mit of the permit •vinee atterimtr, to , hamper the farmer as forest engineer in .that or any pro- •sYstern for settlers'''slash:. No b...7", 1 unnecessarily in clearing his land. At Episode of V, ar. the smile time .it is established that • Pierre I4oti, the .:French author, • • ' no :haphazard 'citizen, in a hurry to gives in L'Illustration - 11,-;PietUr6(4i,le urn-hie7-waste-stuffi7shall-have the account of hisexperiences ih, "going 'right ,fo ,Iiieerthe to the. -front." .- 'The, „Iloston lion dollars of geed timber :and -wee- script his a translation of the. artie" ace, the Safety of towns' and villages.: cle. This incident is taken from it: From May_ 1St to, October 1st is _the . "'There- Nve,re also • villagers • who "closed season." • Wherever possible. journeyed with lie.soldiera itiOnk this: , the 'aree-te be. burned is examined by •etow,decl highway. '_1.retnember 'one "a:forest guard, " The duration of the very pretty peasant Woman who, in, , permit averaged'hiatlast year from. the midst of 'the English cotntitieSttry seven to fifieendays. -.In certain dis- wagons, was dragging, by means Of a tricts, owing to dangerous weather, cord, a little: wagon that contained high winds an • numeroeS• fires, the two sleeping babies. She Was toiling, permits of the district had to be can- for the aseent.was'steep at that point. celled altogether,- Of 11,828' permits .A handsome Scotch Sergeant, iho nr'ait issued to .settlers in -1914; only 128 . smoking a cigarette, seated the 'while caped,--beYend-conteoll-which-With-h-Wlege-ba" • •• • " is about oneyPer cent. This Is A re- est wagon, said to her in the •• sign markebly smell proportion of ilareage langth.ge, 'Pees no your end of the to .the -credit of settlers, for in 'sane -cord.' She miderstoott, and .accepted . districts of Canada the ,settlers . are with, -a gentle,' Conftised,- reSpOnsible- for thirty to forty' per.: • "The .:Scotsnian " wound the frail cent., of all.forest-destruction. Byezi• cable Omit his left ark, keeping his of this one per cent. in •British do -..right hand 'free for smoking; and it luinbiar• under ' the permit „Systemy-was be. who ,guided, ihe WO bribed of -- quite a. number were due to extraer- Prance, whose • little'. carriage• the dinakY accidents; in several cases sud- truck draggedilike a 'feather." . EXTRA imagutiAv fwith the fruit you Order for • Tell ilinViao, that youwant it in the '7,Pialiiikei'''aiiginateit or 4,401 Sugar - 2. or 5 lb. Sealed Cartons Oi 10,20,50 or 100 lb. Cloth Bags. ‘• Then you will be sive te get • theGENUINE Canada's favorite •" sugar for three generation -the sugar to whose preserving purity you can safely trust good fruit. . • CANADA SUGAR REFINING CO., /IMMO, 1401411EAL 135 "v1 Pretty Letidon.'dirle 'right Vita While" Men Fight:the Another tostimettial,40 ilie faCt•that the weinen Of tiketit Britain ate -the new order of things) Where* they' boo taken the place in it great tla Who have„gotto tothe front,is this Photograph. /tt a London draper';; sho the men wile.' composed the Are brieude of tho 'establishment. During the they•answor tho, all as tittiohly As did thetsale menabora, and they- are as noaale in a stub4ittt blaze as an male firelightor. -: ' igallieneesiriMtenne, E'lictay"..ttt the 'Front,' tapkily...accoatoming themselves to briVallts, 'of 'ON vtteated by the men . p the. ,glils have taken the places of. -. .41A4 V/hich - are ..taking • .pitten .capablo . handling. the hose and „ . • , •